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'Spin can undo pace-fed Aussies'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Desember 2012 | 14.23

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Confident ... Rangana Herath believes his spin can undo Australia in the Boxing Day Test. Source:AP

Sri Lanka spin star Rangana Herath says Australia's batsmen's liking for pace can play into his hands in the Boxing Day Test.

Herath, the world's leading Test wicket-taker this year with 60 scalps from nine matches, gave a glimpse of the damage he can cause by taking 5-95 in the second innings of his side's defeat in the first Test in Hobart.

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That included the wickets of top-order batsmen David Warner and Shane Watson.

The wily left-armer suspects there might be more rewards for him at the MCG on a pitch he expects to lend assistance as the second Test wears on.

He said the rarity with which Australia's batsmen faced quality spin would help.

"Definitely. I know that the Australians, playing even in domestic cricket, they are 80-90 per cent playing against fast bowlers," Herath told reporters on Saturday.

"So with that, I have chances to get wickets bowling spin."

Herath said Sri Lanka's first Boxing Day Test in Melbourne in 17 years was a "remarkable occasion" for the tourists.

But it is unlikely to overwhelm them.

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They handled a comparable situation well a year ago when they beat South Africa in a Boxing Day Test in Durban.

Herath took combined figures of 9-128 on that occasion to be man of the match.

"In South Africa, (it was) the same scenario," he said.

"We lost against South Africa in the first Test and we came back strongly and we did well and we won against South Africa in that Boxing Day Test match.

"That was a remarkable one, because that's the only (Test) we have won against South Africa on their soil."

A win in Melbourne would be the visitors' first Test triumph in Australia.

Herath said experience playing one-day cricket at the MCG had him expecting the support of a very large Sri Lankan contingent in the crowd.


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Phoenix steal point from Mariners

Sneaking up ... Danny Sanchez keeps Nick Montgomery at bay. Source: ROSS SETFORD / AAP

A-League leaders Central Coast extend their unbeaten streak to nine games, but couldn't shake off a determined Wellington, who fought back for a dogged 1-1 draw at Westpac Stadium.

The struggling Phoenix put together a vastly improved performance but looked set for their their third successive defeat after in-form Mariners striker Daniel McBreen's 44th minute goal - his 10th of the season.

However, Wellington treated the 5961-strong crowd to an excellent late fightback, a Dani Sanchez header levelling the scores in the 83rd minute.

Wellington kept pace with the competition leaders for much of the first half, 19-year-old striker Louis Fenton looking particularly dangerous down the right flank.

P W D L GD Pts
1 Central Coast 12 8 3 1 13 27
2 Adelaide 12 8 1 3 5 25
3 Western Sydney 12 6 1 5 5 19
4 Perth 12 5 2 5 3 17
5 Victory 11 5 2 4 -3 17
6 Wellington 12 3 4 5 -1 13
7 Newcastle 11 4 1 6 -8 13
8 Heart 11 3 3 5 -2 12
9 Brisbane 12 3 2 7 -1 11
10 Sydney 11 3 1 7 -11 10

His combination with 17-year-old Tyler Boyd and the experienced Jeremy Brockie more than compensated for the absence of Paul Ifill, who is out for at least a month following ankle surgery.

The Mariners' composure in midfield, marshalled by skipper John Hutchinson, proved hard to break.

The Phoenix looked to have done enough to go into halftime on even terms only to pay the price for not clearing their line with the Mariners hot on attack.

Keeper Mark Paston could only parry Tom Rogic's initial strike, and although there was a hint of offside, McBreen finished clinically to give the visitors a 1-0 lead at the break.


Relive all the hoghlights from the game in our A-League Match Centre


Central Coast worked hard to put the Phoenix away after the restart, and although Wellington created chances, a lack of confidence in the final third meant the Mariners' goal was rarely threatened.

The Mariners continued to run hard, and Rogic was only denied by a superb Paston reflex save as he broke through clear on goal in the 72nd minute.

But substitute Benjamin Totori, who was a handful down the left with his pace following his injection in the 70th minute, sent in a taunting cross in the 83rd minute, and Sanchez looped his header high over keeper Mathew Ryan for Wellington to salvage the draw.


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Siddle can be the new Ponting: Starc

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Desember 2012 | 14.23

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Leader ... Starc (L) says Siddle (R) is an inspiration for the whole team. Source: Wayne Ludbey / News Limited

Insisting there's no cause for panic, Australia paceman Mitchell Starc has likened lion-hearted Peter Siddle's presence and energy to that of the great Ricky Ponting.

With Australia's fast bowlers dropping like flies this summer, selectors are once again considering blooding a newcomer for the second Test against Sri Lanka starting on Boxing Day.

But regardless of whether or not Tasmania speedster Jackson Bird follows in the footsteps of Victoria paceman John Hastings and earns his first baggy green cap, Starc says Australia's bowling stocks are in good hands with Siddle leading the way.

The trimmed-down quick took a Test-turning nine wickets in a man-of-the-match display against the Lankans in Hobart after missing the series decider against South Africa due to exhaustion.

"He's amazing. Not just for the bowlers, but for the whole team," Starc said on Friday.

"Obviously in days gone by, Ricky Ponting is there and gets everyone up just by being there in the field and off the park as well.

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"Siddsy, he's well on his way to being someone like that. He's very inspirational how he goes about his business on and off the field.

"As a bowling unit, he probably gets us going. He's the heart and soul of the attack, charging in every over for 60 overs in a Test match, bowling his heart out and having nothing left at the end of the day.

"It's awesome playing with him and I guess he just drags the team along."

Playing his second summer for Australia, Starc said he relished having Siddle as a mentor.

"For me, I'm still learning - I'm only 22 - but playing with Sidds I can take so much confidence being with him," he said.

"Having him at the other end to talk to, like he did with me in the first innings about where I was bowling - where I could have been bowling - to hold up those runs but still be aggressive, it was great to have him there."

Unlike fellow youngsters James Pattinson and Pat Cummins, Starc is yet to break down.

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Cummins called the resilient left-armer an "anomaly" but Starc believes his healthy body is as much good luck as good management.

"I've had my fair share of injuries. I've been pretty lucky the last 18 months to hold together and play a lot of cricket," Starc said.

"I haven't done too many things different. Just making sure I'm doing all my recoveries and hitting the gym when I need to do and making my body ready to go every game."

Australia captain Michael Clarke is in doubt for the Boxing Day Test, but Starc is certain the star batsman will play.

"He'd have to do a lot more than a hamstring injury to keep him out," he said.


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pocock re-signs with ARU until 2015

Secured ... David Pocock re-signs with the ARU for three more years. Source: Greg Wood / AFP

Wallabies flanker David Pocock is a strong chance to captain Australia at the 2015 Rugby World Cup after re-signing with the ARU for a further three years.

Acting ARU chief executive Matt Carroll announces Pocock agrees to terms until the end of 2015 after earlier this season departing from the Western Force to sign with Super Rugby rivals the ACT Brumbies.

The 24-year-old owns 45 Test caps for the Wallabies since making his debut against the All Blacks in 2008 and has twice been a nominee for the IRB international player of the year award.

The news comes two weeks after Wallabies teammate Quade Cooper re-signed following a tumultuous few months with ARU officials.

"David has made an enormous contribution to rugby as a player and an outstanding individual,'' said Carroll.

"His leadership combined with his form on the field is a huge asset for Australia and the Brumbies.

"We are very pleased to be able to have David available for the Wallabies not only for next year's Lions Tour, but the next Rugby Championship series and quite possibly the next Rugby World Cup in London in 2015.''

The announcement comes after a mixed season for Pocock.

After being named to captain the Wallabies for the first time, Australia slumped to a stunning loss to Scotland in Newcastle.

He then led the Wallabies to a 3-0 home series win over Wales before injuring his knee against the All Blacks in August which required surgery.

Young flanker Michael Hooper blossomed in his absence and retained his spot ahead of Pocock for most of the recent spring tour of Europe.


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Prize money increase for Aus Open

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 20 Desember 2012 | 14.23

Record prize money ... Australian Open Tournament Director Craig Tiley. Source: George Salpigtidis / News Limited

Early-round losers at next month's Australian Open will receive a significant pay rise after officials release the breakdown of the biggest purse in tennis history.

Responding to player demands for a bigger slice of the pie, Tennis Australia has averted a boycott of the opening grand slam of the year with rich rewards for the sport's battlers.

While the 2013 singles champions at Melbourne Park will collect monster cheques for $2.43 million, first, second and third-round losers will also be big winners after considerable prize money increases.

First-round losers will receive $27,600, representing a 32.7 per cent boost from 2012; second-round casualties will pocket $45,500 (up 36.6 per cent) and; third-round losers will pick up $71,000, a 30 per cent increase from the $54,625 this year.

With a record total purse of $30 million on offer, prize money for the fourth round, quarter-finals and semis has gone up by an average of more than 14 per cent.

Prize money for the three rounds of qualifying has also increased almost 15 per cent, while first-round doubles prize money has increased more than 30 per cent.

Players' council representatives Roger Federer, Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray were central to the push for more money, arguing that the players were the entertainers and deserving of more.

The game's biggest names agreed it was vital for the lower-ranked players who help make up the 128-strong grand slam draws to receive extra prize money.

Tennis Australia boss Craig Tiley has always considered this a reasonable compromise.

"Our motivation is to make a major contribution toward helping ensure professional tennis players can make a decent living,'' said Tiley, the Australian Open tournament director.

"As we have said in the past, it is a real issue and needs to be urgently addressed throughout the sport.

"That is why the biggest increases are in the earlier rounds, qualifying and doubles which in effect rewards a lot of the lower-ranked players for their achievements which, by the way, should not be undersold.

"To just reach the main draw of a slam, a professional tennis player has to be among the top 100 in what is one of, if not the most, competitive professional sport in the world.

"At the same time, we also still want to continue to recognise the incredible drawing power and contribution of the top players.''


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Doohan backs Stoner for V8s

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Switch ... Stoner dropped by the TeamVodafone garage at the Sydney 500. Source: Brett Costello / News Limited

Motorcycling great Mick Doohan is confident Casey Stoner will be a success if he pursues a career in V8 Supercars.

Two-time MotoGP world champion Stoner has been tipped to compete in next year's Dunlop Series, a minor category to the V8 Supercars championship, following his retirement from motorcycling.

The 27-year-old tested Jamie Whincup's championship-winning Holden Commodore at Queensland Raceway earlier this month, posting impressive times in just his second outing behind the wheel of a V8 Supercar.

And five-time 500cc world motorcycle champion Doohan thinks there's no doubt Stoner will be quick enough to succeed if he chooses a four-wheel career.

"He's a talented guy, he's young enough and I think a little bit of race craft will be the only thing that'll take time," Doohan said.

"Once he's done a bit of testing, I don't think his speed will be a problem - just the race craft.

"He knows how to race so it'll just be a matter of learning where you can and can't put the car on the circuit when you're in traffic."


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Origin better off for future: Ikin

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 Desember 2012 | 14.23

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Resolved ... players like James Tamou won't get a choice in future. Source: Sam Ruttyn / News Limited

State of Origin will be better off under new eligibility rules announced by the ARLC, according to the youngest player ever to represent Queensland, Ben Ikin.

Ikin is fiercely passionate about his home state and believes the new rules will ensure the intense tribalism that makes Origin so special is preserved for the future.

Origin eligibility has been a hot topic for years and the issue reared its ugly head again in 2012 when James Tamou was cherrypicked from New Zealand to play for the Blues.

An even more famous case is Greg Inglis - the superstar centre who has become a legend of the Maroons despite growing up and starting his football career in Bowraville, on the NSW mid-north coast.

Neither of these controversies would have exploded under the new rules, which require a player to have lived in the state he plays Origin for before he turns 13.

"At least we now know that as long as you've spent some amount of time in your home state prior to the age of 13, you're eligible to play for your state, which is fantastic," Ikin told foxsports.com.au in an exclusive interview on Wednesday.

"It links the eligibility more closely to the naming of the contest, being State of Origin, because I mean there's opportunities for those who have moved around later on in life, to end up playing for the state where they started playing rugby league or spent a big part of their life playing rugby league.

"I just think the decision has been made and now everybody knows where they stand - that's the best part about it."

While the new rules have clarified the position of players who have played football in both NSW and Queensland, it has muddied the waters for those who moved to Australia after their 13th birthday, as well as a new breed of footballer - the likes of Melbourne Storm youngster Mahe Fonua, who has resided in Victoria his entire life.

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Speaking on Fox Sports News' The Long Lunch, rugby league reporter Russell Fairfax protested against the fact that the new rules excluded Fonua from a pay cheque because he is now ineligible to play in the game's showpiece.

"Look, I don't think they've gone far enough," Fairfax suggested.

"What about Mahe Fonua? He's the first Melbourne born and bred player to play in the NRL. Can't he play Origin?

"If he resides in Melbourne all his life, he's eligible to play for Australia - which is one of the other rules - but now here's a guy who can't play State of Origin football.

"They haven't gone far enough."

While Ikin had some sympathy for Fairfax's view, he said the new rules were the best short-term fix available.

In the longer term, Ikin says players like Fonua need to be aligned to either NSW or Queensland from the moment they strap on a football boot and made a suggestion for how this could happen.

"I think what they've done is take some clear steps to fix things up in the short term and you'll find that the next round of decisions made around State of Origin eligibility will take a longer term view," Ikin said.

"This may create some controversy, but I think we need to allocate zones for Queensland and NSW, because lets be honest, the way the game's growing it's going to grow outside of Queensland and NSW over the next 20, 30, 50 years.

"So you could very well have, lets say 15 per cent of the games top 30 playes not eligible for Origin.

"My question is that what happens if the next Billy Slater, Cameron Smith and Cooper Cronk are born and raised in Victoria? You've also got the Polynesian influence in the game and New Zealand influence.

"And at the moment, the best solution in my mind when I've sat down and tried to think it through, is you link zones to NSW and Queensland.

"Now that may mean PNG, north island, south island of New Zealand, WA, Victoria are all allocated a state - either NSW or Queensland - which they are aligned to.

"It means they can still be passionate about their homeland but they know from the start of their rugby league career that they can play Origin and they know who they are eligible to play for.

"It may not include New Zealand or the Pacific Islands, it may just include the other states in Australia, but the upshot is that you'll have all these West Australians supporting Queensland in a market that we want to grow the game, because there's a pathway to the jewel of the crown.

"But it means that both sides are still rooted in Queensland and NSW, and that's the most vital thing."


What do you think of Ikin's idea to include other states and countries in State of Origin through a zoning framework? Leave a comment below to have your say!


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

McLachlan moves closer to AFL top job

Promotion ... McLachlan is viewed as the natural successor to Demetriou. Source: Wayne Ludbey / News Limited

The AFL has shuffled its executive structure with Gillon McLachlan promoted to the new role of deputy chief executive officer.

McLachlan has been chief operating officer at the AFL since 2008 and earlier this year knocked by a huge offer to be the head of the National Rugby League.

He will now fill the role of acting head of football operations until a replacement is named for Adrian Anderson, who leaves this week.

AFL CEO Andrew Demetriou said other impending and recent departures from the executive team provided an opportunity to review and reposition the AFL's executive structure.

"It is timely to establish a new look team at the executive level to ensure the AFL maintains an organisational structure that is aligned with our future strategic priorities," Demetriou said.

"Gill has made a significant contribution to the AFL across a number of strategic fronts and this promotion is well deserved."


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Wade first wicky to bowl in 29 years

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 18 Desember 2012 | 14.23

Super all-rounder ... Wicketkeeper Matthew Wade bowls a rare over for Australia. Source: Wayne Ludbey / News Limited

Matthew Wade became the first Australian wicketkeeper to bowl in a Test since Rod Marsh 29 years ago, in a bizarre roll of the dice by Michael Clarke on day five of the Test against Sri Lanka.

Australia was six wickets short of victory just before tea on the final day when wade was handed the ball and Phil Hughes took over the gloves and pads.

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Wade bowled just one over - a maiden - and his medium pace of 130km/h kept Thilan Samaraweera quiet.

The decision was a strange gambit with the game in the balance as Australia struggled with injuries to front line paceman Ben Hilfenhaus and part-time spinner Clarke.

Rod Marsh bowled 10 overs against Pakistan in Faisalabad in 1980 and another two overs in the penultimate match of his career - the 1984 Boxing Day Test at the MCG. His 12 career overs yielded no wickets and 54 runs.


Follow the conclusion of the first Test between Sri Lanka and Australia with our Live Blog.


14.23 | 0 komentar | Read More

Live: AUS v SRI, T1 D5

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Lionhearted ... Peter Siddle leads Australia's bowlers to victory on day five. Source: Rick Rycroft / AP

Mitchell Starc and Peter Siddle have claimed nine wickets between them to clean up Sri Lanka's batsmen and deliver Australia a 137-run victory on day five of the first Test in Hobart.

Re-live the action as it happened with our live and interactive blog.

You can also follow all the stats, pitch maps and wagon wheels at our Cricket Match Centre.


1st Test - Blundstone Arena

14 December 2012 - Day 5, Session 3

Sri Lanka 2nd Innings

S. Eranga 6 20 0 0 30
C. Welegedara 0 4 0 0 0
M. Starc 28.2 7 63 5 2.22

Complete

First ball: 10:30 AM December 14, 2012
Location: Blundstone Arena

Match Summary

Australia: 5/450 & 9/278
Sri Lanka: 10/336 & 10/255

Latest comments (all times EDT):

1812: So that's all she wrote here in Hobart, with Australia winning by 137 runs. Mitchell Starc finishes with figures of 5-63 off 28.2 overs, receiving able support from Peter Siddle (4-50 off 26) who was Australia's best bowler. We now turn our attention to the MCG and the Boxing Day Test. Thanks for joining me, Trent Hile, over the course of the past five days and I look forward to your company again in Melbourne. Bye for now.

1805: WICKET! (Welegedara c Wade b Starc, SL 255) Starc wraps things up! He gets a vicious shorter ball to grab the glove of Welegedara on the way through to Wade who accepts the catch. That's five wickets to the young New South Welshman and he's helped deliver Australia's first victory of the summer.

1801: Peter Siddle gets the duties at the other end. He's bowled so courageously in the tough periods today - it would be fitting if he wrapped things up.

1755: WICKET! (Herath 8, b Starc, SL 9-250) Starc has four! Herath does well to dig out a yorker but gets a touch unlucky as he plays it onto his boot and back onto the stumps. There's just one wicket left for an Aussie win.

1751: Eranga plays out a maiden from Watson. There's 78 balls left for Sri Lanka to survive.

1742: In other news, Usman Khawaja has been withdrawn from Thursday's Big Bash fixture and is rumoured to be replacing Michael Clarke in the Boxing Day Test.

1741: The players are enjoying the final drinks break of this Test, with at least 15 overs remaining.

1736: WICKET! (Kulasekara 9, c Wade b Starc, SL 8-247) Starc gets the double breakthrough! He shapes a perfect out-swinger to the right-handed Kulasekara, grabbing a feint nick on the way through to Wade. Just two wickets stand in between Australia and their first victory of the summer.

1735: Herath is offering plenty of little half chances. If one of these don't go to hand soon, Michael Clarke might need to visit a shrink.

1732: We've now got two overs until the final hour where at least 15 overs must be bowled. Starc charging into Herath.

1730: FOUR! Kulasekara rocks onto the back foot against Lyon and belts him to the rope in front of point.

1719: Chance! Close! Starc finds the edge from Kulasekara who attempts to drive, but Watson can't get his hands low enough at slip as it collects him in the foot.

1710: WICKET! (Jayawardene 21, c Hussey b Starc, SL 7-235) Starc strikes! He gets a bit of extra bounce from a good-length delivery which finds the shoulder of Jayawardene's bat, carrying to Hussey at second slip. Good bowling change from Clarke, with Starc doing the job.

1708: FOUR! Not a good start from Starc; too straight to Jayawardene from around the wicket and he helps himself to a freebie with no man at fine leg. SL 6-233

1707: It's a double change with Starc replacing Siddle at the other end.

1705: Clarke introduces Lyon back into the attack. He hasn't had too much impact so far in this Test, but gets the chance to be the hero here.

1700: Kulasekara cops a nasty one from Siddle that cuts back and rises steeply, collecting him in the chest.

1647: Steve says: "At the moment this popgun attack is missing the venom of Johnson, who can still bowl at 145kms. He definitely should play next Test."

Trent says: I think he might get a chance in Starc's place at the MCG, with Bird to come in in the place of Hilfenhaus.

1640: WICKET! ... Siddle strikes but DRS will have the final say! He jags one back past the bat of Samaraweera and cannons into the front pad, with Nigel Long raising the finger after little hesitation. We'll go upstairs first ... but yes, that's out. (Samaraweera 49, LBW Siddle, SL 6-218)

1635: Close! Watson has Samaraweera defending in the air but Phil Hughes at silly mid-off can't react quick enough.

1634: For those of you who missed it, you can check out Wade bowling here.

1631: FOUR! Samaraweera gets a short one from Watson and duly dispatches it to the square leg boundary.

1622: FOUR! The wicketkeeper Jayawardene opens his account with a punch through the off-side to finish the Siddle over.

1616: WICKET! (Mathews 19, c Wade b Siddle, SL 5-201) In times of need, who else delivers but Siddle. The lionhearted quick charges in to Mathews and entices the edge with a ball that just moves away fractionally from the right-hander. Pretty poor shot in the end from Mathews but terrific persistence from Siddle.

1607: FOUR! Mathews fishes uppishly outside off-stump to Siddle but finds the gap behind square for a rare boundary. SL 4-194

1603: Watson gets things underway after tea with all ten of his teammates fielding up inside the circle. Can he make the breakthrough, or will this be Adelaide all over again?

1547: It appears we're seeing everything - bouncers, mully-grubbers, keepers bowling, batsmen keeping - bar wickets in Hobart.

1543: You wouldn't believe this but Wade is bowling around 132km/h. He finishes with a maiden. That's TEA.

1539: Well this is unbelievable. Matthew Wade has taken off the keeping pads to have a trundle, with Phillip Hughes taking the gloves.

1534: After all that, Starc sends the next one whistling past Mathews' nose. I don't think he'll be ducking any more.

1530: Starc charges in from around the wicket with Mathews on strike. He attempts to duck a shorter delivery but it doesn't get high enough, slamming into his exposed elbow just above the arm guard. That will hurt. After a lengthy delay for some treatment, Mathews opts to continue on.

1524: For those who can't see the Aussies rescuing this Test ... the last time Australia failed to win a Test in the first four of the summer was 26 years ago, in the 1986/87 Ashes series.

1519: As Lyon has an LBW shout against a leaving Samaraweera turned down, Ken says: "How much more evidence do the selectors need to see that this group of bowlers, with the exception of Siddle, are nowhere near good enough to win test matches. Hilfenhaus bowls crap, Starc is shaping as Johnson's understudy, Lyon is the most non-threatening spinner in world cricket and Johnson is a pie chucker of the highest order. Time to give some of the young guys a go – those that aren't injured that is."

1511: Lyon returns and the final ball of his over hits a rough patch and almost rolls under the bat of Samaraweera.

1509: Lewis of Macksville says: "If there is anything that our bowling department is missing it is a fast bowler like a brett lee or a pat cummins to get under the batsmans skin. We need a fast fiery spell to be bowled. Pattinson and especially cummins are capable of doing this but we cant keep them both on the pitch."

Trent says: What I'd give to see Cummins and Pattinson operating in tandem...

1505: FOUR! Starc has Samaraweera jumping at the crease but he uses soft hands to guide the ball safely to the boundary behind square. SL 4-174

1501: Watson gets things back underway with Samaraweera on strike. Clarke must be starting to worry with these niggling rain delays. There's 45 overs left in the day.

1437: RAIN DELAY: Some threatening clouds circling the mountains have hit the ground and brought more rain. As the players head off it seems to be easing slightly, but the covers are going on.

1436: Samaraweera cops a nasty one from Watson that climbs steeply and catches him on the gloves. If there was a short leg in there he would have been in serious trouble.

1431: After a slow few overs, the new ball has been taken. There was a hint of reverse-swing with the old ball so the Aussies will be hoping for some conventional shape. Siddle will get first crack to Mathews, who is 1 off 24.

1418: The new ball is now available but Clarke has stalled on taking it.

1409: FOUR! Watson into the attack and throws his first ball full and wide. Samaraweera feasts on the wide half-volley and crunches it to the rope in front of point.

1405: Siddle beats the bat of the new man Mathews and gives him a brief spray to top things off.

1400: The sun is out and play is back underway in Bellerive. It'll be Nathan Lyon bouncing in to Samaraweera.

1333: Just when you thought Australia were on their way, the heavens have opened. We've got a delay at Bellerive.

1330: WICKET! For real this time? Yes! Plumb as you like (Sangakkara 63, LBW Siddle, SL 4-151). Siddle finally gets one that pitches in line and straightens, catching Sangakkara on the pads as he gets caught up on the crease. Umpire Long says that's out. Kumar reviews the decision but to no avail.

1320: WICKET! ... Siddle catches Samaraweera on the front pad with a ball that stays low and Umpire Long gives him out! The batsmen decide to review the decision and it's a wise move too, with Samaraweera getting that front leg just outside the line off off stump. So it'll be NOT OUT. That's two overturned either side of lunch with Nigel Long getting a bit trigger happy.

1321: ZSM of Brisbane says: "Lyon's lack of penetration in the 2nd innings, when he should be posing all sorts of problems, is a worry. Happened against Sth Africa (twice) and is happening again here. Petersen and Herath did exactly what you'd expect a spinner to do, but Lyon doesn't seem to have any answers."

1318: FOUR! Lyon errs short and wide; Sangakkara takes full advantage, punching him through cover-point for the first boundary after lunch. SL 3-150

1309: I hope you enjoyed your lunch - a bit of left-over spag bol in my lunchbox today for those who were wondering -  but the players are back out in the middle meaning we're just about ready to get underway. It'll be Lyon pushing into a generous Bellerive breeze.

1236: Make sure you check out Brett Geeves' latest piece for a giggle over your ham and cheese roll.

1231: LUNCH: Australia take just the one wicket to the sheds after the first session with the danger man Sangakkara successfully reviewing and having his LBW dismissal overturned. The Aussies require another seven wickets, while Sri Lanka need another 248 to win.

1226: It's hard work out there for the Sri Lankans; they're 3-140 off 69 overs. Watson is making a few things happen with some reverse swing and the wicket deteriorating.

1219: Wicket! ... wait REVERSED! Sangakkara cops one of those spooky Watson deliveries that stays low from around the wicket, clipping him on the knee-roll as he attempts to pull. Umpire Long raises the finger! It looked out but Sangakkara decides he has little choice but to review. Hold the phone - he got himself just outside the line of off-stump. That might be the first DRS review that's gone Sri Lanka's way this Test!

1214: As Samaraweera edges Lyon wide of slip for three, Mark asks: "Are you a Bird or Cutting fan? It seems like the Foxsports readers are split on who should replace Hilf. Should be a poll."

Trent says: I'm a Bird man, particularly with the red ball. More of a genuine swing bowler. Plus I'd have to trade Cutting out of my Fantasy Big Bash team.

1203: There's been some reports circulating Twitter this morning surrounding allegations of ball tampering by two Australian players. Check out the story here.

A Sri Lankan newspaper report claims the touring cricket team has accused Australian players of ball tampering during the Hobart Test. "There was a bit of controversy during the Sri Lankan chase for victory in the second innings when two prominent Australians were noticed allegedly tampering with the ball," wrote the Sri Lankan Daily news correspondent, adding "we understand that the Sri Lankan management had brought this ugly side of the game to the notice of the match referee." The report said players "were seen trying to up the seam using their fingers so as to give undue advantage to their bowlers." Cricinfo correspondent Daniel Brettig reported on twitter that ICC referee Chris Broad is "aware of reports but says no official complaint" has been made.

1200: FOUR! Samaraweera comes down the track and is beaten for flight by Lyon, but picks it up cleanly enough to send it two bounces and to the rope at long-on. SL 3-127

1151: Rippersportspro of NSW asks: "Two questions about Siddle. Firstly, how many of his 132 Test wickets have been caught in the slips? Secondly, overall, how many times are we going to see the combination "caught Clarke bowled Siddle" by the time the career of one of those two comes to an end?"

Trent says: I'd have to forward the first one on to the good fellows in the Fox Sports Stats department - the second, I'd say 7-10 percent of his overall wickets.

1145: FOUR! Fifty to Sangakkara: Warner serves up a juicey full-toss to Sangakkara and he dispatches it to the mid-wicket boundary. That's the fifty up for the Sri Lankan veteran. Can you believe he's 35? I reckon he could pass as a 28-year-old.

1142: Siddle gets the chop despite taking the big wicket of Jayawardene, with Clarke favouring the left-armer Starc to Samaraweera. Starc justifies the change with a good over, beating the bat on a couple of occasions.

1137: The new man Samaraweera was out edging Lyon on the final ball of day two - will be interesting to see what approach he takes to Warner. He's yet to get off the mark.  

1131: WICKET! (Jayawardene 19 c Clarke b Siddle, SL 3-119) Siddle finds the breakthrough straight after drinks! He pitches up to Jayawardene with a full-length out-swinger and finds the outside edge. Clarke takes a terrific catch, low and to his right - that would have tested out the hamstring! That's a big wicket for Australia.

1126 says: Filomena Giglio says: "My message to CA – get off your moral high horse, swallow your pride and allow Murali to teach Lyon the Doosera as this could lift him for being almost there to being world class.  From being a part time cricketer 3-4 years ago to being the fastest off spinner to 50 wickets means Lyon has what it takes but needs experience and time to hone his craft (which is bloody hard craft I must say)."

Trent says: I completely agree that Lyon would be well served by some mentoring from Murali, although I'm not entirely sure whether he would be capable of bowling an undisguised Doosra. The guys who bowl it - your Murali's and Ajmal's of the world - are more wristy off-spinners, whereas Lyon is your conventional finger spinner. I think that's why he's developed 'Jeff' which is more of a carrom ball and the reverse spin is imparted by the fingers, rather than the wrist.

1118: A pretty good start there from Warner. He's drifting and landing the ball nicely.

1116: Here's an interesting bowling change from Clarke: David Warner into the attack with his part-time leggies. He can bowl a wicket-taking delivery but I'm a tad surprised to see Lyon discarded so soon.

1114: Jayawardene flicks one away through square and picks up three. The real worry for the Aussies this morning is that we're yet to see a ball beat the edge or misbehave off the wicket.

1108: FOUR! Watson strays down leg with an in-swinger to Jayawardene and the skipper gets a touch on it to see the ball race away for four. That's the hundred up in a solid start from the tourists. SL 2-101

1106: Another nice piece of fielding for the 13th man Jordan Silk, as he races around from fine leg to keep a Sangakkara leg glance to just the single.

1103: Scott of Geelong asks: "Surely if Clarkes hamstring was so bad he wouldnt be out there fielding, or is he resigned to the fact that he will miss the next game and wants to contribute now while he can?"

Trent says: I'd say the skipper is pretty keen to ensure his boys get over the line for the first time this summer, and he'll deal with whatever consequences over the coming week.

1100: Drew from Cairns asks via email: "How is the pitch holding up?"

Trent says: It's played OK so far this morning but once the effects of the roller wear off, I expect we'll see the odd nightmare ball shoot through low and cause a few problems.

1052: We've got a double change, with Peter Siddle replacing Starc at the Church St end. He was very nearly the hero in Adelaide and will be keen to do the business for his skipper today.

1049: Shane Watson into the attack for the first time today. He got a couple to almost roll last night so Jayawardene and Sangakkara will have to be on their toes.

1045: Alex Hutchings of Plymouth says: "Sangakkara needs 103 runs to beat Lara's record of 195 innings to reach 10000 test runs. Could see some history being made."

Trent says: Thanks for the heads up Alex. I must confess I'm a bit of a closet Kumar fan, so that only adds another excuse to give each of his runs a sneaky fist pump.

1040: FOUR! Lyon comes back over the wicket to Sangakkara but drops too short and gets punished through the off-side. That one just sat up and said "hit me". SL 2-86

1034: FOUR! Sangakkara plays another beauty, this time a square drive off the back foot to Lyon for four.

1031: Classic Sangakkara. The left-hander plays through the line with a stylish drive through extra-cover off Starc, picking up three as the ball pulls up just short of the rope.

1026: Comedy of errors there. Jayawardene comes out of his crease to drive Lyon and belts it straight back at the bowler. Lyon cleans up with a nice piece of fielding but then undoes the good work with a wild throw back at the stumps. Sri Lanka pick up two. SL 2-73

1021: There's two main points of interest this morning that I will tick off early: a) the sun is shining and the forecast is clear and b) Michael Clarke is on the field and has resumed his post at first slip.

1014: Starc begins with a maiden. I'm tipping there'll be plenty of those today. Nathan Lyon has the ball at the other end.

1011: Mitchell Starc will kick things off for the Aussies with Jayawardene taking strike.

1005: Good morning all and welcome to foxsports.com.au's coverage of the final day of the Hobart Test. Trent Hile here to guide you through the conclusion of this first encounter between Australia and Sri Lanka. After four intriguing days of Test cricket, the situation is this: Sri Lanka require a further 328 runs for victory with eight wickets in hand with Kumar Sangakkara (18 not out) and captain Mahela Jayawardene (5 not out) to resume.

Don't forget that you can get involved and have your say by emailing us at blogs@foxsports.com.au or by leaving a comment at the bottom of the page.


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UFC has grand plans Down Under

Written By Unknown on Senin, 17 Desember 2012 | 14.23

Superstar ... The UFC is hoping to have big-name fighters like Anderson Silva fight at Etihad Stadium. Source: AP

Ultimate Fighting Championship officials want to hold between four to six events in Australia each year and stage a star-filled title fight in front of 60,000 fans at Melbourne's Etihad Stadium.

The UFC has bold plans for Australia. The world's biggest mixed martial arts organisation held a successful Queensland debut on Saturday at the Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre.

UFC director of international development Marshall Zelaznik said while the company only had one event booked in Australia next year, they hoped to schedule more.

"The event will be in December. We are holding venues throughout the country and we will see how the schedule works out," Zelaznik said.

"But we are always looking and juggling our calendar. We could get another one here. We had two this year.

"We know this market could take four to six events (each year). It is just a matter of getting them here."

Zelaznik admitted the only way to get a legitimate UFC superstar on an Australian card, such as a George St-Pierre or Anderson Silva, would be to hold a stadium show under the roof at Melbourne's Etihad Stadium.

However, in Victoria MMA fights are not allowed to be staged inside a caged fence and must be held in a traditional boxing ring.

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Victoria's opposition Labor Party said on the weekend it wanted to overturn the State's ban on cage fighting.

The party wants a national code on combat sports and the introduction of a safe alternative to a boxing ring for MMA events.

Zelaznik said while he was optimistic for the ban to be overturned, a resolution was not likely any time soon.

He said in 2014 the UFC wanted to stage a pay-per-view event at Melbourne's Etihad Stadium.

"We could close the roof at Etihad and get 60,000 in there for a pay-per-view," he said.

"It won't be next year but 2014 is likely, maybe the year after. That's the way to get a pay-per-view in Australia.

"We are continually optimistic. The fans have been great and supportive. We will not give up the fight."

The UFC will also stage another series of The Ultimate Fighter reality show in Australia next year and it could feature Australian fighters only or an Australia v New Zealand concept.

The scheduled December show is likely to be the series' finale.

"The next series will have the same schedule as we had this year," Zelaznik said.

"We don't know if it will be the Smashes or even a country versus country show.

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"We are working with the people at FX to see how it will work.

"The FX officials here were very happy with the numbers."

The UFC on FX 6 event at the Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre broke the arena's all time gate record, racking up $900,000 in ticket sales alone.

Zelaznik revealed nearly half of the crowd were from interstate or overseas.

"One of the things we are proud of is how people travel to UFC events around the world and almost 50 per cent travelled for this event," he said.

"56 per cent of tickets came from Queensland.

"We had 16 per cent from New South Wales, 11 per cent from Victoria and 10 per cent from outside Australia.

"It is a testament to what our fans are willing to do."


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As it happened: AUS v SL, T1 D4

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Tough role ... Starc faces a heavy workload on day five with Hilfenhaus out of action. Source:News Limited

Eight Sri Lanka wickets stand between Australia and their first victory of the summer after day four of the first Test in Hobart.

Re-live the action as it happened with our live and interactive blog.

You can also follow all the stats, pitch maps and wagon wheels at our Cricket Match Centre.


1st Test - Blundstone Arena

14 December 2012 - Day 4, Session 3

Sri Lanka 2nd Innings

K. Sangakkara 18 88 2 0 20.45
M. Jayawarden... 5 37 1 0 13.51
S. Watson 9 4 10 1 1.11

Stumps

First ball: 10:30 AM December 14, 2012
Location: Blundstone Arena

Match Summary

Australia: 5/450 & 9/278
Sri Lanka: 10/336 & 2/65

Latest comments (all times EDT):

1807: Well Jayawardene and Sangakkara have survived a testing little period to go to stumps at 2-65. They trail by 328 with a day left to play. Australia's injury curse continued today with captain Clarke retiring hurt with a hamstring injury. He had scans on it today but won't know the results until tomorrow. I hope you will join me, Trent Hile, again from 10.30am (EDT) tomorrow as we see whether the Aussies can wrap things up for their first win of the summer.

1801: Watson to bowl the final over of the day to Sangakkara.

1759: FOUR! Jayawardene receives a rank half-tracker from Hussey and makes no mistake with dispatching it to the cover boundary.

1756: Strap yourselves in cricket lovers - Michael Hussey is into the attack.

1743: Jayawardene on strike to Siddle. He's yet to get off the mark after facing 22 deliveries.

1734: The ghosts in this pitch continue to rear their heads. Shane Watson gets his first ball to just about roll to Sangakarra. Thankfully for the Sri Lankan, it was outside the off stump.

1732: What did that hit?! Siddle comes into the attack and bowls to Jayawardene. He gets one to move on an angle that Shane Warne would happily see one of his leg-spinners deviate. It obviously got some assistance from one of the cracks. Jayawardene can only smile - no batsman would hit that.

1727: FOUR! Lyon drops short to Sangakkara and he punches him away to the rope with a classy square drive. He moves to 16 while the skipper is yet to score from 12 deliveries.

1723: Ouch! Starc gets one to jag and bounce back violently at Sangakkara and it thuds into his stomach. The veteran grins. He's obviously got some protection under there.

1707: That brings the skipper Jayawardene to the crease. If Australia can remove one of this pair tonight, they'll go a long way to winning this Test.

1704: WICKET! (Karunaratne 30, b Starc, SL 2-47) Starc knocks over Karunaratne with a ripper! He surprises the Sri Lankan opener with a yorker fired in at off-stump and the big Karuna is too late in getting his bat down on it. The ball cannons into the off peg and Starc celebrates.

1655: FOUR! The big Karuna (as I've dubbed him) records the first boundary in a while, chipping Lyon over mid-wicket for four. He's now 28 off 78. His partner Sangakkara is finding it equally tough, scoring five singles in 35 balls. That's certainly not his style.

1650: Australia have slowed Sri Lanka's run rate to a crawl here, the Sri Lankans struggling to work Nathan Lyon into the gaps. Clarke throws the ball back to Mitchell Starc for his second spell of the innings and he starts with a shocking delivery that is lucky not to be called a wide.  The Aussie quick rediscovers his line with the remaining five balls of the over, with one delivery keeping low and rolling through to Wade behind the stumps.

1638: CHANCE! Sangakkara rocks onto the back foot for the cut-shot and gets an edge to Michael Clarke at slip. The Aussie captain grasses the chance though with the ball hitting him quite high on the hands. The Aussies would have loved to have seen the back of Sangakkara for another low score.

1633: FOUR! Karunaratne finally breaks the shackles as Shane Watson strays onto his pads. The Sri Lanka batsman works Watson through mid-wicket and out the boundary in a quality stroke. A few of Watson's deliveries are just dying as they travel past the batsmen, with keeper Matthew Wade taking the odd ball on the second bounce. The Aussie all-rounder finds the pad of Karunaratne and, curiously, there isn't much of an appeal. He was coming around the wicket however. Sri Lanka 1-35.

1625: Watson and Lyon are giving the Sri Lankans very little width to work with and Karunaratne, in particular, looks to be getting quite frustrated. Clarke is the only man in the slip cordon with Michael Hussey in a shortish gully while Phil Hughes is in at short cover. Sri Lanka are 1-30.

1620: David Warner misses a wonderful chance of a run-out just moments after the commentators had been discussing a n injury concern for the Aussie batsman. Warner picked up the ball at point and had all three stumps to aim at at the non-striker's end but his throw was well wide. He appears to be battling an elbow complaint at the moment, which can't have made the attempt easy.

1616: There doesn't appear to be too much turn out there for Lyon with the Sri Lankans playing him comfortably off the back foot. Sri Lanka are now 1-28.

1613: Kumar Sangakkara is now at the wicket and he manages to negotiate the remainder of Watson's over. The veteran Sri Lanka batsman will be desperate to make a score in the second innings after failing in his first dig. Australia are going to try some spin now with Nathan Lyon coming into the attack.

1609: WICKET! Shane Watson gets the breakthrough for Australia as he has Tillakaratne Dilshan caught behind with the first ball of his spell! The Aussie all-rounder was immediately on the spot and just got one to go away from the right-hander and pick up the edge. It was a comfortable catch for Matthew Wade behind the stumps, the opener departing for 11. Sri Lanka are now 1-26.

1608: Starc goes within a whisker of the opening wicket with a brilliant yorker to Karunaratne. The Aussie quick and Sri Lankan opener are having quite a battle at the moment.

1607: Rippersportspro of NSW  says: @Parko, I most certainly remember that run chase in '99 with Gilly (149 not out) and Langer (127) scoring centuries after Australia were 5-126 chasing 369 for victory, which at the time was the 4th highest successful run chase. You are also right in saying that Hussey has a knack of being a partnership breaker. Speaking of which, Hussey is the first batsman to score 3 Test centuries in Hobart. Warner perhaps could be another bowling option if required. @Paul and @Minh Man: You are both spot on about Clarke's batting form and the whole of Australia will be praying that he is fit for Melbourne, which is the only main ground in Australia that Clarke has not scored a Test century on.

1600: Australia go up for and LBW shout on Karunaratne and despite their being plenty of evidence of an inside edge, Clarke opts for a referral. The video review clearly shows a thick inside edge, leaving Peter Siddle to return to the top of his mark.

1549: We've got a few words exchanged between bowler and batsman here. Karunaratne drives the ball back down the wicket and Starc takes a shot at the stumps, to the Sri Lankan's disgust.

1547: Close! FOUR! Starc gets a good delivery to jag back at Karunaratne and finds the inside edge. The ball evades a diving Matthew Wade and runs away for four.

1544: With Clarke out of action, we might see overs from David Warner as this pitch gets slower.

1536: FOUR! Dilshan frees the arms and lets loose, cracking Starc over cover for four. SL 0-13

1530: Mixed bag in the first over from Starc, with five runs from it. Lets hope he can find his lines with Hilfenhaus out of action.

1526: Mitchell Starc will have first use of the new ball with the left-hander Karunaratne taking strike. Dilshan is at the other end.

1525: Joel Bridgwood asks: "Hey Trent. Just wondering if you think Clarke will field? If not do you think Watson will be guided by him, and who will field given Johnson is already fielding for Hilfenhaus??"

Trent says: Hi Joel. I can tell you that the good news is Clarke is out there on the field. We've seen a couple of Tassie youngsters - including Penrith boy Jordan Silk, who took a good outfield catch in the first innings - perform the 12th man duties so far, so I'd imagine they'll be called upon again should Clarke go off.

1504: WICKET! (Hilfenhaus 0, LBW Herath, AUS 9-278: lead by 392) Herath drifts on into Hilfenhaus' front pad and that's a straightforward decision for the umpire. Hussey remains unbeaten on 31 and Herath picks up another five-wicket haul to extend his lead at the top of the international wicket-taker's list.

1459: Mark asks: Hi Trent, I thought they gave more power to the umpires so if 1/5th of the ball is hitting stump shouldn't that be umpire's choice instead of hitting?

Trent says: That's correct Mark - so  with the Starc decision, he was given out and then reviewed the decision. The one-fifth of the ball hitting the stumps meant the decision stayed with the umpire.

1454: WICKET! (Lyon 11, b Herath, AUS 8-271) Herath gets the last laugh as Lyon goes to the well once too often with the sweep shot, being knocked over after an entertaining 11.

1453: FOUR! Impressive stuff from Lyon! The young offie shows he's no slouch with the bat, sweeping Hearath in front of square with superb timing.

1450: FOUR! Lyon clips one beautifully through mid-wicket off Welegedara to pick up his first boundary of the innings.

1441: WICKET! ... wait, they'll review that. Welegedara gets one to tail back in sharply to Starc and catches him on the toe. Umpire Hill raises the finger. Starc sticks around to challenge. Well it was close, but there's about a fifth of the ball clipping leg stump so the decision stands. (Starc 4, LBW Welegedara, AUS 7-256)

1440: FOUR! Starc cracks Welegedara straight back down the pitch for four on just his second delivery faced.

1437: WICKET! (Siddle 4, c Jayawardene b Welegedara AUS 6-250) What a catch from the keeper Jayawardene! Siddle edges a good-length delivery from the left-armer Welegedara and Jayawardene takes a brilliant one-handed catch in front of first slip. Mitchell Starc comes to the crease for the first time since his little cameo against the Proteas in Perth.

1436: FOUR! Siddle joins in on the act, with a tidy punch off the back foot through the leg-side for four. Herath is really starting to leak runs now.

1433: SIX! Hussey takes off from where Clarke left proceedings by belting Herath over extra cover for a big six. That's a remarkable shot!

1432: Clarke retires hurt! The skipper isn't happy with what appears to be his hamstring and decides not to risk it. He leaves the field, retired hurt for 57 off 46.

1429: FOUR! Clarke gets a juicey full-toss from Welegedara and belts him through mid-wicket for four. AUS 5-238

1426: FIFTY TO CLARKE! The skipper belts one straight down the ground and picks up three to move to 51. It's come off just 49 balls. A remarkle little cameo considering the conditions.

1424: SIX! This time Clarke goes square of the wicket with a crisply hit slog sweep. It bounces over the rope and half-volleys into the fence.

1423: FOUR! Super shot from Clarke. He uses his feet to get to the pitch of a Herath delivery and finds the gap between long-on and deep mid-wicket.

1420: FOUR! Clarke steers one masterfully through the vacant third man region for four. That wasn't a bad ball from Weledegara, just a super shot from Clarke. AUS 5-214, lead by 328.

1417: Appeal ... review. Clarke prods forward to Herath and gets caught on the pad, but it appears as though he got safely outside the line of off stump. Jayawardene goes for Sri Lanka's final review but with no luck - while it would have gone on to hit the stumps, that hit him a fair way outside off.

1406: FOUR! Clarke gets down low and sweeps a Herath full-bunger along the ground and to the fence on the leg-side. He's up to 27 and the lead is 316.

1404: FOUR! Clarke advances down the track to Welegedara and gets a healthy leading edge in attempting to drive. It lands safely over the head of cover and hops away to the rope.

1403: I'm loving umpire Nigel Long's method of deliberation. Welegedara has a shout for LBW against Clarke, and umpire Long arches his neck and waits for the bowler to finish before declaring "not out".

1400: Scott of Grimoz0507 says: "Hate to say it but Sri Lanka are in with a real chance of pinching this test now, 300-350 wont be enough in my opinion."

Trent says: It's certainly opened the door. However it does look tough to make runs with the pitch getting slower and lower.

1355: FOUR! Hussey gets his innings underway by using soft hands to guide one through the gully region for four.

1353: The way things are headed at the moment, Clarke might not have to worry about a declaration.

1349: WICKET! (Wade 11, c Kulasekara b Herath, AUS 5-181) Wade attempts to hoist Herath over the fence but succeeds only in finding Kulasekara at long-on.

1346: The ball is keeping noticably low with this soft ball, but Wade and Clarke are rotating the strike nicely. They're both going at more than a run-a-ball as the lead passes 293.

1344: Parko of Queanbeyan on the Watson stumping: "Wade would have stuffed that up. Can you imagine if Wade kept to Warnie?!?!? Watto's slowly losing his batting mojo and my faith in him at four is waning."

Trent says: It was a very lazy piece of cricket from Watson.

1334: WICKET! (Hughes 16, b Eranga, AUS 4-165) Australia lose another one! Hughes plays a pretty ordinary shot to Eranga who cramps him for room around the wicket, chopping the ball back onto his stumps. Australia have now lost 4-48.

1333: FOUR! Superbly-timed sweep from Wade, who pierces the gap in front of square for a boundary.

1326: Interesting move by Australia, with Matthew Wade being sent in (I'd imagine as a pinch hitter). I wonder if Parko approves of the move?

1322: WICKET! (Watson 5, st Jayawardene b Herath, AUS 3-153) Third time lucky for Sri Lanka, but not so for Watson who departs for 5. Herath draws him slightly out of his crease, dragging the back foot, and Jayawardene whips off the bails before he can get back.

1321: Watson survives another big shout for LBW.

1317: That was a bit of a 'stinker' from umpire Hill. Perhaps he was trying to give Herath a get-square for his shocking LBW decision.

1313: Wicket! wait ... REVIEW: Watson goes back to Herath from around the wicket and doesn't offer a shot - it hits him outside the line and the Sri Lankans go up. After a lengthy deliberation, umpire Hill raises the finger! Watson challenges the decision and thankfully too; that was missing the stumps by a long way. Watson survives.

1311: Watson and Hughes are back out in the middle and ready to resume.

1308: JN of Brisbane says: "Say what you like about Warner but he basically seems to only get out caught. That spells CLASS to me. Shame he got out though. Would have been nice to see him go the tonk after lunch."

Trent says: Interesting argument - is someone who consistently gets themselves out caught classier than a player who gets out to good balls? The floor is open...

1301: So with a lead of 260, the general consensus is that Clarke will want another 100-150 runs by tea to declare. There is a slight chance of rain this afternoon but the forecast is clear for tomorrow.

1231: While enjoying a sandwich over lunch, I highly recommend you take a peek at Brett Geeves' 'unique' insight into day three. The former Tassie quick has been a real hit with foxsports.com.au users with his daily articles this Test.

1230: LUNCH: Watson and Hughes survive to the break. Australia are 2-146: a lead of 260.

1224: Watson looks a touch edgy at the crease. He's played and missed first up, then squared up by Welegedara. Hughes is equally contained by Herath. It looks like this wicket isn't easy to get in on.

1215: WICKET! (Cowan 56, b Welegedara, AUS 2-140) Cowan gets an absolute ripper from Welegedara that jags back off the seam and goes straight through the gate, knocking over his middle stump. That brings Shane Watson to the crease.

1212: With just under 20 minutes until lunch, Australia's lead is now 254.

1208: Grant of Sydney asks: "When was the last time the Australian opening pair put on 100 together?? Feels like an age since back to the days of Langer and Hayden!"

Trent says: This was Cowan and Warner's second 100+ partnership: they put on 214 against India in Perth last summer

1203: Phillip Hughes comes to the crease and will be keen to add to his 86 in the first innings. He's made plenty of runs in the Ryobi Cup this year, so perhaps the requirement of quick runs will suit.

1159: WICKET! (Warner 68, c P Jayawardene b Herath, AUS 1-132) Sri Lanka finally get the breakthrough as Warner departs, having edged Herath to the keeper Jayawardene who juggles it but takes the second chance. The lead is now 247.

1153: FOUR! The Warner switch-hit is back! Herath can only shake his head in disbelief as Warner changes grip and stance to a right-hander, clubbing him through cover (to a left-hander) for a boundary.

1151: FOUR! Fifty to Cowan: The Tasmanian gets some width from Welegedara and cuts him away to join his partner Warner past the 50 milestone.

1145: SIX! Here we go! Warner shuffles out of his crease and hoicks Herath over the mid-wicket fence for a big six. It looks like he's going put the foot down now. AUS 0-117

1142: Warner walks down the pitch to Welegedara and attempts to hoist him over cow corner - but misses. We might be about to see a change in gears from the Aussies.

1139: FOUR! Fifty to Warner: Welegedara is back into the attack and immediately drops short to Warner. The nuggety opener rocks onto the back foot and pulls him away in front of square. That's another Test fifty to the little New South Welshman. 0-107

1133: FOUR! Cowan breaks the shackles with a pull shot to Kulasekara. Hot Spot shows it came flush off the toe, but had enough juice to find the rope. The lead is up to 217. AUS 0-103.

1126: Mark from BrisVegas says: "I was thinking about what Cowan needs to make in this dig for both he and Ian Chappell to feel as though they are BOTH correct. He gets out cheaply, and Chappelli has the last laugh. He scores the century and he is all smiles. What is the middle ground where they both win the argument? I say 47."

Trent says: Is it just me, or do they both seem like the type of blokes that will keep telling us they're correct regardless? If Cowan does get a score, Chappelli can probably argue that he should have been out LBW last night.

1118: FOUR! ... and they're made to run all of them. Cowan cuts Herath but it's high on the bat, pulling up just short of the rope. The pair scamper through for four - and almost get a fifth from a misfield. AUS 0-87

1116: Rangana Herath replaces Mathews in the attack. Lets see if he can carry on the good work of his pacemen.

1115: Whippy of Australia asks: "Are the Sri Lankans bowling tight, or is Cowan and Warner just not rotating the strike much? 29 overs gone for 80 runs is quite slow. Warner's strike rate of sub 50 runs per 100 balls suggest he is getting bogged down. Cowan's is about right, though he looks like the aggressor!"

Trent says: The wicket is playing a little bit lower and slower which is making scoring harder. Sri Lanka's bowlers are doing a good job - bowling good areas and to their field.

1112: Samuel Jensen says: "Maybe Wade should get a nice comfy armchair to wicketkeep from? seems to be the best way to go about it..."

1109: Appeal ... review: Cowan appears to play and miss a fullish delivery in trying to defend. There's a shout from behind the stumps but umpire Hill isn't interested. The tourists opt for the DRS but the noise they heard was probably the bat flicking pad. Not out.

1106: Parko of Queanbeyan says: "Heckler?!?!? Don't bite the hand that feeds you. However, "the complete package" is someone who can 'keep 100% and bat consistantly well - I don't think Wade does either."

Trent says: I reckon you'd do well to name one keeper in history who could "keep 100% and bat consistently well" - even Adam Gilchrist had knockers of his keeping ability and went through lean trots with the bat. It's a tough caper, keeping for 100+ overs then being expected to make big scores. Look at how the keeping duties have affected a guy like AB De Villers. That hundred in Perth was his first in a year.

1058: There's a few figures filtering in for a proposed declaration:

Scott of Geelong says: "I think the Aussies need at least a 400 run lead, with the talent in the SL batting lineup it would too risky to give them too much of a sniff, and Dilshan proved that he can score at a rapid rate so they wouldnt want to let him off the leash because he could get them close very fast."

Paul of Tasmania says: "I think Clarke would be looking for a declaration target of 350 with a few overs to bowl before tea. Wish I could be there again today, can't get there until later."

Rippersportspro of NSW says: "Clarke should declare about half an hour before tea and set Sri Lanka around about 350-400. Considering today and tomorrow are both 98-over days, the Aussies can bat for a bit longer than they anticipated today, but Clarke will also be mindful of giving his bowlers enough overs to bowl Sri Lanka out a second time. Also, no team batting first has lost a Test in Hobart."

Trent says: I shall forward all on to Pup...

1056: There you go Alex of Plymouth ... As Cowan turns one square and sets off for a run, the call is "how many?" They settle for a single. AUS 0-79

1051: Ricky of NSW asks: "Trentster, do you see similarities between this test and Adelaide up to this point? Australia building on a big lead heading in to day for 4 with a bowler down going into the last innings of the game. Will history repeat itself?"

Trent says: I actually do, Ricky. I snapped up the $6 about the draw in Adelaide and was going to take it on again this morning - sadly the pub across the road from work was closed. The way Dilshan and Mathews made it look so easy yesterday makes me think if Sangakkara and Jayawardene can chip in too, we might be headed for a stalemate.

1049: Cowan and Warner doing it nicely this morning. This pitch is still playing truly with no sign of that green monster so many feared last week.

1036: Parko of Queanbeyan says: "The Trenster's on time! These early mornings must be killing you... what do you reckon, Wade's wicket keeping up to Test standard? Would you rather a "specialist" keeper?"

Trent says: I was tempted to hit the snooze button on the early alarm but knew I'd have to sneak past you, Parko. What is your profession again? ... professional heckler? Wade's a work in progress - If we're going on pure keeping ability, I think Tim Paine is the premier gloveman in the country. But as Wade has shown in his six Tests, his batting is a real asset. These days, selectors want that complete package.

1024: FOUR! FOUR! Welegedara is too short and wide again, and Cowan takes full advantage with a superbly placed cut behind square. Cowan finishes the over with a tidy flick through mid-wicket for four. AUS 0-61

1021: As an Eranga delivery flicks Warner's pad and runs away for four leg byes, the big question today is how many do Australia need to declare? The loss of Ben Hilfenhaus will make things difficult for captain Clarke. And while the skies are clear this morning, there's always a threat of rain in the apple isle. How many do you think the Aussies need? Send through your suggestions by posting a comment or emailing me at blogs@foxsports.com.au.

1017: FOUR! Welegedara gives Cowan some width outside of off stump and he cuts brilliantly behind square for a boundary. AUS 0-43

1011: FOUR! Pitched up by Eranga again and it's more of the same from Warner, who thrashes it through backward point for four to join Cowan on 16.

1006: Chanaka Welegedera will operate from the Church St End. He was Sri Lanka's most successful bowler in the first innings with three scalps.

1004: Eranga pitches up on the last ball of the over and Warner drives it square of the wicket for four. Australia now lead by 145.

1001: We're underway on day four with Shaminda Eranga bowling to David Warner.

1000: Morning all, and welcome to foxsports.com.au's continued coverage of the first Test between Australia and Sri Lanka in Hobart. Trent Hile joining you again to guide you through the action on day four. David Warner and Ed Cowan will resume with Australia 0-27, a lead of 141 runs.


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UFC has grand plans Down Under

Superstar ... The UFC is hoping to have big-name fighters like Anderson Silva fight at Etihad Stadium. Source: AP

Ultimate Fighting Championship officials want to hold between four to six events in Australia each year and stage a star-filled title fight in front of 60,000 fans at Melbourne's Etihad Stadium.

The UFC has bold plans for Australia. The world's biggest mixed martial arts organisation held a successful Queensland debut on Saturday at the Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre.

UFC director of international development Marshall Zelaznik said while the company only had one event booked in Australia next year, they hoped to schedule more.

"The event will be in December. We are holding venues throughout the country and we will see how the schedule works out," Zelaznik said.

"But we are always looking and juggling our calendar. We could get another one here. We had two this year.

"We know this market could take four to six events (each year). It is just a matter of getting them here."

Zelaznik admitted the only way to get a legitimate UFC superstar on an Australian card, such as a George St-Pierre or Anderson Silva, would be to hold a stadium show under the roof at Melbourne's Etihad Stadium.

However, in Victoria MMA fights are not allowed to be staged inside a caged fence and must be held in a traditional boxing ring.

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Victoria's opposition Labor Party said on the weekend it wanted to overturn the State's ban on cage fighting.

The party wants a national code on combat sports and the introduction of a safe alternative to a boxing ring for MMA events.

Zelaznik said while he was optimistic for the ban to be overturned, a resolution was not likely any time soon.

He said in 2014 the UFC wanted to stage a pay-per-view event at Melbourne's Etihad Stadium.

"We could close the roof at Etihad and get 60,000 in there for a pay-per-view," he said.

"It won't be next year but 2014 is likely, maybe the year after. That's the way to get a pay-per-view in Australia.

"We are continually optimistic. The fans have been great and supportive. We will not give up the fight."

The UFC will also stage another series of The Ultimate Fighter reality show in Australia next year and it could feature Australian fighters only or an Australia v New Zealand concept.

The scheduled December show is likely to be the series' finale.

"The next series will have the same schedule as we had this year," Zelaznik said.

"We don't know if it will be the Smashes or even a country versus country show.

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"We are working with the people at FX to see how it will work.

"The FX officials here were very happy with the numbers."

The UFC on FX 6 event at the Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre broke the arena's all time gate record, racking up $900,000 in ticket sales alone.

Zelaznik revealed nearly half of the crowd were from interstate or overseas.

"One of the things we are proud of is how people travel to UFC events around the world and almost 50 per cent travelled for this event," he said.

"56 per cent of tickets came from Queensland.

"We had 16 per cent from New South Wales, 11 per cent from Victoria and 10 per cent from outside Australia.

"It is a testament to what our fans are willing to do."


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As it happened: AUS v SL, T1 D4

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Tough role ... Starc faces a heavy workload on day five with Hilfenhaus out of action. Source:News Limited

Eight Sri Lanka wickets stand between Australia and their first victory of the summer after day four of the first Test in Hobart.

Re-live the action as it happened with our live and interactive blog.

You can also follow all the stats, pitch maps and wagon wheels at our Cricket Match Centre.


1st Test - Blundstone Arena

14 December 2012 - Day 4, Session 3

Sri Lanka 2nd Innings

K. Sangakkara 18 88 2 0 20.45
M. Jayawarden... 5 37 1 0 13.51
S. Watson 9 4 10 1 1.11

Stumps

First ball: 10:30 AM December 14, 2012
Location: Blundstone Arena

Match Summary

Australia: 5/450 & 9/278
Sri Lanka: 10/336 & 2/65

Latest comments (all times EDT):

1807: Well Jayawardene and Sangakkara have survived a testing little period to go to stumps at 2-65. They trail by 328 with a day left to play. Australia's injury curse continued today with captain Clarke retiring hurt with a hamstring injury. He had scans on it today but won't know the results until tomorrow. I hope you will join me, Trent Hile, again from 10.30am (EDT) tomorrow as we see whether the Aussies can wrap things up for their first win of the summer.

1801: Watson to bowl the final over of the day to Sangakkara.

1759: FOUR! Jayawardene receives a rank half-tracker from Hussey and makes no mistake with dispatching it to the cover boundary.

1756: Strap yourselves in cricket lovers - Michael Hussey is into the attack.

1743: Jayawardene on strike to Siddle. He's yet to get off the mark after facing 22 deliveries.

1734: The ghosts in this pitch continue to rear their heads. Shane Watson gets his first ball to just about roll to Sangakarra. Thankfully for the Sri Lankan, it was outside the off stump.

1732: What did that hit?! Siddle comes into the attack and bowls to Jayawardene. He gets one to move on an angle that Shane Warne would happily see one of his leg-spinners deviate. It obviously got some assistance from one of the cracks. Jayawardene can only smile - no batsman would hit that.

1727: FOUR! Lyon drops short to Sangakkara and he punches him away to the rope with a classy square drive. He moves to 16 while the skipper is yet to score from 12 deliveries.

1723: Ouch! Starc gets one to jag and bounce back violently at Sangakkara and it thuds into his stomach. The veteran grins. He's obviously got some protection under there.

1707: That brings the skipper Jayawardene to the crease. If Australia can remove one of this pair tonight, they'll go a long way to winning this Test.

1704: WICKET! (Karunaratne 30, b Starc, SL 2-47) Starc knocks over Karunaratne with a ripper! He surprises the Sri Lankan opener with a yorker fired in at off-stump and the big Karuna is too late in getting his bat down on it. The ball cannons into the off peg and Starc celebrates.

1655: FOUR! The big Karuna (as I've dubbed him) records the first boundary in a while, chipping Lyon over mid-wicket for four. He's now 28 off 78. His partner Sangakkara is finding it equally tough, scoring five singles in 35 balls. That's certainly not his style.

1650: Australia have slowed Sri Lanka's run rate to a crawl here, the Sri Lankans struggling to work Nathan Lyon into the gaps. Clarke throws the ball back to Mitchell Starc for his second spell of the innings and he starts with a shocking delivery that is lucky not to be called a wide.  The Aussie quick rediscovers his line with the remaining five balls of the over, with one delivery keeping low and rolling through to Wade behind the stumps.

1638: CHANCE! Sangakkara rocks onto the back foot for the cut-shot and gets an edge to Michael Clarke at slip. The Aussie captain grasses the chance though with the ball hitting him quite high on the hands. The Aussies would have loved to have seen the back of Sangakkara for another low score.

1633: FOUR! Karunaratne finally breaks the shackles as Shane Watson strays onto his pads. The Sri Lanka batsman works Watson through mid-wicket and out the boundary in a quality stroke. A few of Watson's deliveries are just dying as they travel past the batsmen, with keeper Matthew Wade taking the odd ball on the second bounce. The Aussie all-rounder finds the pad of Karunaratne and, curiously, there isn't much of an appeal. He was coming around the wicket however. Sri Lanka 1-35.

1625: Watson and Lyon are giving the Sri Lankans very little width to work with and Karunaratne, in particular, looks to be getting quite frustrated. Clarke is the only man in the slip cordon with Michael Hussey in a shortish gully while Phil Hughes is in at short cover. Sri Lanka are 1-30.

1620: David Warner misses a wonderful chance of a run-out just moments after the commentators had been discussing a n injury concern for the Aussie batsman. Warner picked up the ball at point and had all three stumps to aim at at the non-striker's end but his throw was well wide. He appears to be battling an elbow complaint at the moment, which can't have made the attempt easy.

1616: There doesn't appear to be too much turn out there for Lyon with the Sri Lankans playing him comfortably off the back foot. Sri Lanka are now 1-28.

1613: Kumar Sangakkara is now at the wicket and he manages to negotiate the remainder of Watson's over. The veteran Sri Lanka batsman will be desperate to make a score in the second innings after failing in his first dig. Australia are going to try some spin now with Nathan Lyon coming into the attack.

1609: WICKET! Shane Watson gets the breakthrough for Australia as he has Tillakaratne Dilshan caught behind with the first ball of his spell! The Aussie all-rounder was immediately on the spot and just got one to go away from the right-hander and pick up the edge. It was a comfortable catch for Matthew Wade behind the stumps, the opener departing for 11. Sri Lanka are now 1-26.

1608: Starc goes within a whisker of the opening wicket with a brilliant yorker to Karunaratne. The Aussie quick and Sri Lankan opener are having quite a battle at the moment.

1607: Rippersportspro of NSW  says: @Parko, I most certainly remember that run chase in '99 with Gilly (149 not out) and Langer (127) scoring centuries after Australia were 5-126 chasing 369 for victory, which at the time was the 4th highest successful run chase. You are also right in saying that Hussey has a knack of being a partnership breaker. Speaking of which, Hussey is the first batsman to score 3 Test centuries in Hobart. Warner perhaps could be another bowling option if required. @Paul and @Minh Man: You are both spot on about Clarke's batting form and the whole of Australia will be praying that he is fit for Melbourne, which is the only main ground in Australia that Clarke has not scored a Test century on.

1600: Australia go up for and LBW shout on Karunaratne and despite their being plenty of evidence of an inside edge, Clarke opts for a referral. The video review clearly shows a thick inside edge, leaving Peter Siddle to return to the top of his mark.

1549: We've got a few words exchanged between bowler and batsman here. Karunaratne drives the ball back down the wicket and Starc takes a shot at the stumps, to the Sri Lankan's disgust.

1547: Close! FOUR! Starc gets a good delivery to jag back at Karunaratne and finds the inside edge. The ball evades a diving Matthew Wade and runs away for four.

1544: With Clarke out of action, we might see overs from David Warner as this pitch gets slower.

1536: FOUR! Dilshan frees the arms and lets loose, cracking Starc over cover for four. SL 0-13

1530: Mixed bag in the first over from Starc, with five runs from it. Lets hope he can find his lines with Hilfenhaus out of action.

1526: Mitchell Starc will have first use of the new ball with the left-hander Karunaratne taking strike. Dilshan is at the other end.

1525: Joel Bridgwood asks: "Hey Trent. Just wondering if you think Clarke will field? If not do you think Watson will be guided by him, and who will field given Johnson is already fielding for Hilfenhaus??"

Trent says: Hi Joel. I can tell you that the good news is Clarke is out there on the field. We've seen a couple of Tassie youngsters - including Penrith boy Jordan Silk, who took a good outfield catch in the first innings - perform the 12th man duties so far, so I'd imagine they'll be called upon again should Clarke go off.

1504: WICKET! (Hilfenhaus 0, LBW Herath, AUS 9-278: lead by 392) Herath drifts on into Hilfenhaus' front pad and that's a straightforward decision for the umpire. Hussey remains unbeaten on 31 and Herath picks up another five-wicket haul to extend his lead at the top of the international wicket-taker's list.

1459: Mark asks: Hi Trent, I thought they gave more power to the umpires so if 1/5th of the ball is hitting stump shouldn't that be umpire's choice instead of hitting?

Trent says: That's correct Mark - so  with the Starc decision, he was given out and then reviewed the decision. The one-fifth of the ball hitting the stumps meant the decision stayed with the umpire.

1454: WICKET! (Lyon 11, b Herath, AUS 8-271) Herath gets the last laugh as Lyon goes to the well once too often with the sweep shot, being knocked over after an entertaining 11.

1453: FOUR! Impressive stuff from Lyon! The young offie shows he's no slouch with the bat, sweeping Hearath in front of square with superb timing.

1450: FOUR! Lyon clips one beautifully through mid-wicket off Welegedara to pick up his first boundary of the innings.

1441: WICKET! ... wait, they'll review that. Welegedara gets one to tail back in sharply to Starc and catches him on the toe. Umpire Hill raises the finger. Starc sticks around to challenge. Well it was close, but there's about a fifth of the ball clipping leg stump so the decision stands. (Starc 4, LBW Welegedara, AUS 7-256)

1440: FOUR! Starc cracks Welegedara straight back down the pitch for four on just his second delivery faced.

1437: WICKET! (Siddle 4, c Jayawardene b Welegedara AUS 6-250) What a catch from the keeper Jayawardene! Siddle edges a good-length delivery from the left-armer Welegedara and Jayawardene takes a brilliant one-handed catch in front of first slip. Mitchell Starc comes to the crease for the first time since his little cameo against the Proteas in Perth.

1436: FOUR! Siddle joins in on the act, with a tidy punch off the back foot through the leg-side for four. Herath is really starting to leak runs now.

1433: SIX! Hussey takes off from where Clarke left proceedings by belting Herath over extra cover for a big six. That's a remarkable shot!

1432: Clarke retires hurt! The skipper isn't happy with what appears to be his hamstring and decides not to risk it. He leaves the field, retired hurt for 57 off 46.

1429: FOUR! Clarke gets a juicey full-toss from Welegedara and belts him through mid-wicket for four. AUS 5-238

1426: FIFTY TO CLARKE! The skipper belts one straight down the ground and picks up three to move to 51. It's come off just 49 balls. A remarkle little cameo considering the conditions.

1424: SIX! This time Clarke goes square of the wicket with a crisply hit slog sweep. It bounces over the rope and half-volleys into the fence.

1423: FOUR! Super shot from Clarke. He uses his feet to get to the pitch of a Herath delivery and finds the gap between long-on and deep mid-wicket.

1420: FOUR! Clarke steers one masterfully through the vacant third man region for four. That wasn't a bad ball from Weledegara, just a super shot from Clarke. AUS 5-214, lead by 328.

1417: Appeal ... review. Clarke prods forward to Herath and gets caught on the pad, but it appears as though he got safely outside the line of off stump. Jayawardene goes for Sri Lanka's final review but with no luck - while it would have gone on to hit the stumps, that hit him a fair way outside off.

1406: FOUR! Clarke gets down low and sweeps a Herath full-bunger along the ground and to the fence on the leg-side. He's up to 27 and the lead is 316.

1404: FOUR! Clarke advances down the track to Welegedara and gets a healthy leading edge in attempting to drive. It lands safely over the head of cover and hops away to the rope.

1403: I'm loving umpire Nigel Long's method of deliberation. Welegedara has a shout for LBW against Clarke, and umpire Long arches his neck and waits for the bowler to finish before declaring "not out".

1400: Scott of Grimoz0507 says: "Hate to say it but Sri Lanka are in with a real chance of pinching this test now, 300-350 wont be enough in my opinion."

Trent says: It's certainly opened the door. However it does look tough to make runs with the pitch getting slower and lower.

1355: FOUR! Hussey gets his innings underway by using soft hands to guide one through the gully region for four.

1353: The way things are headed at the moment, Clarke might not have to worry about a declaration.

1349: WICKET! (Wade 11, c Kulasekara b Herath, AUS 5-181) Wade attempts to hoist Herath over the fence but succeeds only in finding Kulasekara at long-on.

1346: The ball is keeping noticably low with this soft ball, but Wade and Clarke are rotating the strike nicely. They're both going at more than a run-a-ball as the lead passes 293.

1344: Parko of Queanbeyan on the Watson stumping: "Wade would have stuffed that up. Can you imagine if Wade kept to Warnie?!?!? Watto's slowly losing his batting mojo and my faith in him at four is waning."

Trent says: It was a very lazy piece of cricket from Watson.

1334: WICKET! (Hughes 16, b Eranga, AUS 4-165) Australia lose another one! Hughes plays a pretty ordinary shot to Eranga who cramps him for room around the wicket, chopping the ball back onto his stumps. Australia have now lost 4-48.

1333: FOUR! Superbly-timed sweep from Wade, who pierces the gap in front of square for a boundary.

1326: Interesting move by Australia, with Matthew Wade being sent in (I'd imagine as a pinch hitter). I wonder if Parko approves of the move?

1322: WICKET! (Watson 5, st Jayawardene b Herath, AUS 3-153) Third time lucky for Sri Lanka, but not so for Watson who departs for 5. Herath draws him slightly out of his crease, dragging the back foot, and Jayawardene whips off the bails before he can get back.

1321: Watson survives another big shout for LBW.

1317: That was a bit of a 'stinker' from umpire Hill. Perhaps he was trying to give Herath a get-square for his shocking LBW decision.

1313: Wicket! wait ... REVIEW: Watson goes back to Herath from around the wicket and doesn't offer a shot - it hits him outside the line and the Sri Lankans go up. After a lengthy deliberation, umpire Hill raises the finger! Watson challenges the decision and thankfully too; that was missing the stumps by a long way. Watson survives.

1311: Watson and Hughes are back out in the middle and ready to resume.

1308: JN of Brisbane says: "Say what you like about Warner but he basically seems to only get out caught. That spells CLASS to me. Shame he got out though. Would have been nice to see him go the tonk after lunch."

Trent says: Interesting argument - is someone who consistently gets themselves out caught classier than a player who gets out to good balls? The floor is open...

1301: So with a lead of 260, the general consensus is that Clarke will want another 100-150 runs by tea to declare. There is a slight chance of rain this afternoon but the forecast is clear for tomorrow.

1231: While enjoying a sandwich over lunch, I highly recommend you take a peek at Brett Geeves' 'unique' insight into day three. The former Tassie quick has been a real hit with foxsports.com.au users with his daily articles this Test.

1230: LUNCH: Watson and Hughes survive to the break. Australia are 2-146: a lead of 260.

1224: Watson looks a touch edgy at the crease. He's played and missed first up, then squared up by Welegedara. Hughes is equally contained by Herath. It looks like this wicket isn't easy to get in on.

1215: WICKET! (Cowan 56, b Welegedara, AUS 2-140) Cowan gets an absolute ripper from Welegedara that jags back off the seam and goes straight through the gate, knocking over his middle stump. That brings Shane Watson to the crease.

1212: With just under 20 minutes until lunch, Australia's lead is now 254.

1208: Grant of Sydney asks: "When was the last time the Australian opening pair put on 100 together?? Feels like an age since back to the days of Langer and Hayden!"

Trent says: This was Cowan and Warner's second 100+ partnership: they put on 214 against India in Perth last summer

1203: Phillip Hughes comes to the crease and will be keen to add to his 86 in the first innings. He's made plenty of runs in the Ryobi Cup this year, so perhaps the requirement of quick runs will suit.

1159: WICKET! (Warner 68, c P Jayawardene b Herath, AUS 1-132) Sri Lanka finally get the breakthrough as Warner departs, having edged Herath to the keeper Jayawardene who juggles it but takes the second chance. The lead is now 247.

1153: FOUR! The Warner switch-hit is back! Herath can only shake his head in disbelief as Warner changes grip and stance to a right-hander, clubbing him through cover (to a left-hander) for a boundary.

1151: FOUR! Fifty to Cowan: The Tasmanian gets some width from Welegedara and cuts him away to join his partner Warner past the 50 milestone.

1145: SIX! Here we go! Warner shuffles out of his crease and hoicks Herath over the mid-wicket fence for a big six. It looks like he's going put the foot down now. AUS 0-117

1142: Warner walks down the pitch to Welegedara and attempts to hoist him over cow corner - but misses. We might be about to see a change in gears from the Aussies.

1139: FOUR! Fifty to Warner: Welegedara is back into the attack and immediately drops short to Warner. The nuggety opener rocks onto the back foot and pulls him away in front of square. That's another Test fifty to the little New South Welshman. 0-107

1133: FOUR! Cowan breaks the shackles with a pull shot to Kulasekara. Hot Spot shows it came flush off the toe, but had enough juice to find the rope. The lead is up to 217. AUS 0-103.

1126: Mark from BrisVegas says: "I was thinking about what Cowan needs to make in this dig for both he and Ian Chappell to feel as though they are BOTH correct. He gets out cheaply, and Chappelli has the last laugh. He scores the century and he is all smiles. What is the middle ground where they both win the argument? I say 47."

Trent says: Is it just me, or do they both seem like the type of blokes that will keep telling us they're correct regardless? If Cowan does get a score, Chappelli can probably argue that he should have been out LBW last night.

1118: FOUR! ... and they're made to run all of them. Cowan cuts Herath but it's high on the bat, pulling up just short of the rope. The pair scamper through for four - and almost get a fifth from a misfield. AUS 0-87

1116: Rangana Herath replaces Mathews in the attack. Lets see if he can carry on the good work of his pacemen.

1115: Whippy of Australia asks: "Are the Sri Lankans bowling tight, or is Cowan and Warner just not rotating the strike much? 29 overs gone for 80 runs is quite slow. Warner's strike rate of sub 50 runs per 100 balls suggest he is getting bogged down. Cowan's is about right, though he looks like the aggressor!"

Trent says: The wicket is playing a little bit lower and slower which is making scoring harder. Sri Lanka's bowlers are doing a good job - bowling good areas and to their field.

1112: Samuel Jensen says: "Maybe Wade should get a nice comfy armchair to wicketkeep from? seems to be the best way to go about it..."

1109: Appeal ... review: Cowan appears to play and miss a fullish delivery in trying to defend. There's a shout from behind the stumps but umpire Hill isn't interested. The tourists opt for the DRS but the noise they heard was probably the bat flicking pad. Not out.

1106: Parko of Queanbeyan says: "Heckler?!?!? Don't bite the hand that feeds you. However, "the complete package" is someone who can 'keep 100% and bat consistantly well - I don't think Wade does either."

Trent says: I reckon you'd do well to name one keeper in history who could "keep 100% and bat consistently well" - even Adam Gilchrist had knockers of his keeping ability and went through lean trots with the bat. It's a tough caper, keeping for 100+ overs then being expected to make big scores. Look at how the keeping duties have affected a guy like AB De Villers. That hundred in Perth was his first in a year.

1058: There's a few figures filtering in for a proposed declaration:

Scott of Geelong says: "I think the Aussies need at least a 400 run lead, with the talent in the SL batting lineup it would too risky to give them too much of a sniff, and Dilshan proved that he can score at a rapid rate so they wouldnt want to let him off the leash because he could get them close very fast."

Paul of Tasmania says: "I think Clarke would be looking for a declaration target of 350 with a few overs to bowl before tea. Wish I could be there again today, can't get there until later."

Rippersportspro of NSW says: "Clarke should declare about half an hour before tea and set Sri Lanka around about 350-400. Considering today and tomorrow are both 98-over days, the Aussies can bat for a bit longer than they anticipated today, but Clarke will also be mindful of giving his bowlers enough overs to bowl Sri Lanka out a second time. Also, no team batting first has lost a Test in Hobart."

Trent says: I shall forward all on to Pup...

1056: There you go Alex of Plymouth ... As Cowan turns one square and sets off for a run, the call is "how many?" They settle for a single. AUS 0-79

1051: Ricky of NSW asks: "Trentster, do you see similarities between this test and Adelaide up to this point? Australia building on a big lead heading in to day for 4 with a bowler down going into the last innings of the game. Will history repeat itself?"

Trent says: I actually do, Ricky. I snapped up the $6 about the draw in Adelaide and was going to take it on again this morning - sadly the pub across the road from work was closed. The way Dilshan and Mathews made it look so easy yesterday makes me think if Sangakkara and Jayawardene can chip in too, we might be headed for a stalemate.

1049: Cowan and Warner doing it nicely this morning. This pitch is still playing truly with no sign of that green monster so many feared last week.

1036: Parko of Queanbeyan says: "The Trenster's on time! These early mornings must be killing you... what do you reckon, Wade's wicket keeping up to Test standard? Would you rather a "specialist" keeper?"

Trent says: I was tempted to hit the snooze button on the early alarm but knew I'd have to sneak past you, Parko. What is your profession again? ... professional heckler? Wade's a work in progress - If we're going on pure keeping ability, I think Tim Paine is the premier gloveman in the country. But as Wade has shown in his six Tests, his batting is a real asset. These days, selectors want that complete package.

1024: FOUR! FOUR! Welegedara is too short and wide again, and Cowan takes full advantage with a superbly placed cut behind square. Cowan finishes the over with a tidy flick through mid-wicket for four. AUS 0-61

1021: As an Eranga delivery flicks Warner's pad and runs away for four leg byes, the big question today is how many do Australia need to declare? The loss of Ben Hilfenhaus will make things difficult for captain Clarke. And while the skies are clear this morning, there's always a threat of rain in the apple isle. How many do you think the Aussies need? Send through your suggestions by posting a comment or emailing me at blogs@foxsports.com.au.

1017: FOUR! Welegedara gives Cowan some width outside of off stump and he cuts brilliantly behind square for a boundary. AUS 0-43

1011: FOUR! Pitched up by Eranga again and it's more of the same from Warner, who thrashes it through backward point for four to join Cowan on 16.

1006: Chanaka Welegedera will operate from the Church St End. He was Sri Lanka's most successful bowler in the first innings with three scalps.

1004: Eranga pitches up on the last ball of the over and Warner drives it square of the wicket for four. Australia now lead by 145.

1001: We're underway on day four with Shaminda Eranga bowling to David Warner.

1000: Morning all, and welcome to foxsports.com.au's continued coverage of the first Test between Australia and Sri Lanka in Hobart. Trent Hile joining you again to guide you through the action on day four. David Warner and Ed Cowan will resume with Australia 0-27, a lead of 141 runs.


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